Microbial system for formaldehyde sensing and remediation

ABSTRACT

Environmental formaldehyde can be detected and remediated in a biological system that incorporates a bacterial cell containing suitable genetic sequences encoding a formaldehyde-inducible regulatory system. The system includes a transcriptional promoter that can be specifically induced in the presence of formaldehyde to transcribe an operably linked gene.

STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH

This invention was made with United States Government support awarded byUSDA, USDA Project Numbers 37262-5588 and 37306-0336; Hatch ProjectNumber 3766. The United States Government has certain rights in thisinvention.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to the fields of biosensing andbioremediation and more particularly to the field of sensing andremediating formaldehyde.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Increasing concern over environmental contaminants has made desirablesystems for detecting and remediating such contaminants. Among the moreimportant contaminants of industrial societies is formaldehyde. Thehealth and environmental effects of formaldehyde have been wellcharacterized, as has their distribution in soil and water. See, e.g."Health and Environmental Effects Profile for Formaldehyde," Report No.EPA/600/X-85/362, Environmental Criteria and Assessment Office, Officeof Health and Environmental Assessment, Office of Research andDevelopment, US Environmental Protection Agency, Cincinnati, Ohio 45268(NTIS document number PB88-174958) (October 1985) and "ExploratoryReport Formaldehyde," Report No. 710401018, National Institute of PublicHealth and Environmental Protection, Bilthoven, The Netherlands (NTISReport No. PB93-224483) (October 1992).

Evidence of formaldehyde carcinogenicity in rats and otherepidemiological evidence have led to the classification of this compoundas a probable human carcinogen. Formaldehyde is a common product ofseveral industries (wood processing, paper production) that feedrun-offs into aquatic ecosystems. Formaldehyde, which is present inapproximately 2,000 entries of the Product Register Data Base, is alsoreleased from common cleaning agents, soaps, shampoos, paints, andlacquers. Little is known about how cells sense this toxin, metabolizeit, or control the genes that are required for formaldehyde oxidation.

Existing chemical monitors for formaldehyde are time-consuming, exhibitvariable sensitivity, and are prone to cross-reactivity with otheraldehydes. It would be useful to utilize a biological system capable ofspecific response to, and detection of, formaldehyde. Moreover, a systemcapable of responding in the presence of formaldehyde could be useful asa bioremediation tool to reduce or eliminate formaldehyde as anenvironmental contaminant. However, to date, no biologicalformaldehyde-inducible detection or remediation system has beenconstructed.

Most organisms have the ability, using various metabolic pathways, togenerate both energy and carbon skeletons by oxidizing a wide spectrumof substrates, including substrates that are themselves environmentaltoxins. Formaldehyde oxidation can be mediated by Class III alcoholdehydrogenase enzymes, also called glutathione-dependentformaldehyde-dehydrogenases or GSH-FDH, which are a well studied classof the zinc-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase protein family that is knownin both prokaryotes and eukaryotes.

GSH-FDH enzymes are believed to perform different functions dependingupon the cell type. In some organisms, GSH-FDH serves a role in thecatabolism of methylated compounds. For example, some methylotrophicmicrobes use GSH-FDH to generate carbon skeletons and NADH from theformaldehyde that is produced from methanol oxidation. Innon-methylotrophic organisms, GSH-FDH rids the cells of toxicformaldehyde produced from the oxidation of methylated substrates suchas choline, sarcosine, methionine, O-methylated amino acids, methanol,methyl halides, or several N-, O-, or S-methylated xenobiotics. In bothroles, GSH-FDH enzymes generate reducing power, NADH, and a product,S-formylglutathione, that can be subsequently oxidized to generateone-carbon compounds such as formate or carbon dioxide.

In particular, S-hydroxy methyl glutathione (HMGSH), an adduct formedspontaneously by glutathione (GSH) and formaldehyde (HCHO) (reaction 1),is both the preferred in vitro substrate and the presumedphysiologically relevant substrate in vivo for GSH-FDH enzymes (reaction2).

(1) HCHO+GSH→HMGSH (spontaneous)

(2) HMGSH+NAD⁺ →S-formylglutathione+NADH+H⁺

Unlike other classes of alcohol dehydrogenase enzymes, members of theGSH-FDH family do not exhibit appreciable activity with short aliphaticalcohol substrates such as ethanol. Instead, GSH-FDH enzymes catalyzethe NAD-dependent oxidation of long chain hydroxylated fatty acids(i.e., 12-hydroxydodecanoic acid) or long chain alcohols.

In the photosynthetic purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides, aglutathione-dependent formaldehyde dehydrogenase protein (AdhI) isencoded by adhI in an operon that also includes cycI which encodes anisoform of the cytochrome c₂ family of electron transport proteins. TheAdhI protein encoded by adhI has the characteristic substrate preferenceof a glutathione-dependent formaldehyde dehydrogenase. Ferguson plotanalysis, using zymograms, suggests that the functional form of AdhI isa homodimer of approximately 40 kDa subunits, analogous to other suchenzymes. The complete nucleotide sequence of R. sphaeroides adhI has notheretofore been disclosed.

Expression of the adhI-cycI operon is thought to be regulated since theabundance of isocytochrome c₂ was increased by a trans-acting regulatorymutation. Rott, et al., "Genetic Evidence for the Role of Isocytochromec₂ in Photosynthetic Growth of Rhodobacter sphaeroides Spd Mutants," J.Bacteriol. 175:358-66 (1993).

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present invention is summarized in that a protein-encoding geneticsequence that is operably linked to a formaldehyde-inducibletranscriptional promoter sequence and a cis-acting operator in a geneticconstruct can be specifically transcribed in a bacterial host cell thatcontains a formaldehyde-specific regulatory system disclosed herein,when the cell is exposed to formaldehyde. The genetic construct isuseful in an assay for detecting formaldehyde.

The invention is further summarized in that a formaldehyde dehydrogenasegene that is operably linked to the formaldehyde-inducibletranscriptional promoter/operator sequence in a genetic construct can bespecifically transcribed in a bacterial host cell that contains theformaldehyde-specific regulatory system when the cell is exposed toformaldehyde, thereby producing a formaldehyde dehydrogenase enzyme. Theconstruct is useful in a bioremediation assay capable of metabolizingformaldehyde into single-carbon skeletons.

The invention is further summarized in that a bacterial cell can respondin a biosensing assay or bioremediation assay if it contains a geneticconstruct that includes a protein-encoding genetic sequence operablylinked to the formaldehyde-inducible transcriptional promoter sequencelinked to a cis-acting operator, a trans-acting regulator of thetranscriptional promoter and a formaldehyde-specific sensor molecule.

When linked to the cis-acting operator sequence described herein, thetranscriptional promoter can be induced in the presence of formaldehydeto transcribe the operably linked protein-encoding sequence in thepresence of a two-component regulatory system wherein a first componentsenses the presence of formaldehyde and a second component regulatestranscription of the protein-encoding sequence. The sensor molecule andthe regulator molecule can be provided as proteins or can be encoded ona genetic construct when placed under the control of a suitablepromoter. The gene or genes encoding the sensor and/or regulator can beprovided on the same construct as the formaldehyde-inducible promoteroperably linked to the coding sequence, or can be provided on separateconstructs. If provided on the same construct, the gene or genes shouldbe under the transcriptional control of an unregulated or constitutivepromoter.

The present invention is also summarized in that a method for detectingthe presence of formaldehyde includes the steps of (1) adding to asample to be tested a bacterial cell that contains (a) a geneticconstruct that includes a genetic sequence encoding a detectable proteinoperably linked to the disclosed promoter/operator sequence, and furthercontains (b) a trans-acting regulator of the formaldehyde-specifictranscriptional promoter as well as (c) a formaldehyde-specific sensormolecule, and then (2) monitoring for the presence of the detectableprotein.

The present invention is also summarized in that a method forremediating formaldehyde from an environment includes the steps of (1)adding to a formaldehyde-containing sample a bacterial cell thatcontains (a) a genetic construct that includes a formaldehydedehydrogenase gene operably linked to the promoter/operator sequencedisclosed herein, and further contains (b) a trans-acting regulator ofthe transcriptional promoter and (c) a formaldehyde-specific sensormolecule, and then (2) monitoring a decrease in formaldehyde level inthe environment.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1a shows a partial restriction map of a portion of the R.sphaeroides genome that encodes the adhI-cycI operon.

FIG. 1b shows a partial restriction map of the promoter portion of theadhI-cycI operon.

FIG. 2 shows a partial restriction map of genomic clone pUI8017 thatcontains the gene that encodes the repressor protein (tentatively namedSpdR) and the gene that encodes the sensor protein (tentatively namedSpdS).

FIG. 3 depicts the induction by methanol and formaldehyde of anindicator gene (lacZ) operably linked to the promoter and operatordescribed herein.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

In its broadest sense, the present invention is a gene regulation systemactive in a bacterial host cell that can be induced at thetranscriptional level when the cell is exposed to formaldehyde. Thetranscriptional regulation scheme contemplated herein is a two-componentregulatory system of the type reviewed by Bourret, R. B. et al., AnnualRev.; Biochem; 60:401-411 (1991), incorporated herein by reference, andby Parkinson, J. S. and E. C. Kofoid, Annual Rev. Genetics, 26:71-112(1992), incorporated herein by reference.

In brief, a two-component regulatory system includes a sensor proteinthat specifically detects a target molecule and, upon detection,transmits a signal to a trans-acting effector or regulatory moleculethat modulates activity elsewhere in a cell. Modulation can be at thetranscriptional, translational, or functional level. In such systems,the signal is generally transmitted by means of autophosphorylation ofthe sensor followed by transphosphorylation by the sensor of theregulatory molecule. In the present system, the regulatory molecule is aDNA-binding repressor protein. Reference herein to the repressorprotein, the effector protein or regulatory protein are all intended torefer to this molecule.

In some two-component regulation systems, the sensor molecule is not asingle protein but is, in fact, a complex of two proteins, both of whichare important to the sensing function. When this is the case, theadditional protein is typically encoded in the same operon as the majorsensor protein. Although there is no evidence that an additional proteinis used by the present regulatory system, if such an additional proteinis a part of the formaldehyde-inducible system, it would likely beencoded on the same piece of cloned genetic material as the repressorand sensor reported herein, since a clone described herein has beendemonstrated to contribute all necessary functions of the regulatorysystem. The competent DNA fragment is part of genomic clone pUI8017obtained from a genomic cosmid library of wild-type Rhodobactersphaeroides (strain 2.4.1) DNA. The genomic library was described byDryden, S. and S. Kaplan, "Localization and Structural analysis of theribosomal RNA operons of Rhodobacter sphaeroides," N. A. R. 18:7267(1990), incorporated herein by reference. The genomic clone pUI8017 wasprepared in cosmid vector pLA2917, which was itself described by Allen,L. N. and R. S. Hanson, "Construction of Broad-Host-Range Cosmid CloningVectors: Identification of Genes Necessary for Growth ofMethylobacterium organophilum on Methanol," J. Bact. 161:955 (1985),incorporated herein by reference.

It is understood that the invention in its broadest forms is notintended to be limited to the transcription and translation of anyparticular indicator gene operably linked to the formaldehyde-induciblepromoter that is regulated in the regulatory system.

Moreover, strictly speaking, formaldehyde itself may not be the targetmolecule that induces the regulatory system. Rather, it is likely that aadduct of formaldehyde, such as S-hydroxy methyl glutathione (HMGSH),may actually be the target molecule of the system described herein.However, it is abundantly clear that the system is responsive to thepresence of formaldehyde and for purposes of this application,convenient reference is made to induction "by formaldehyde," with theunderstanding that subsequent studies may reveal that the true targetmolecule is not formaldehyde but rather a related molecule or adduct.

The formaldehyde that induces the expression system can derive from anysource, including industrial or commercial waste, or a biological orchemical degradation product of such waste. For example, the system canrespond to a methyl donor (such as choline, sarcosine, methionine,O-methylated amino acids, methanol, methyl halides, or several N-, O-,or S-methylated xenobiotics) if the bacterial host cell has the facilityto convert the methyl donor into formaldehyde or if another conversionmechanism is provided.

In the present system, when the repressor is bound to the promoterregion there is virtually no transcription of the operably attached genein the absence of formaldehyde. For purposes of this invention,"virtually no transcription" means less than 10% and preferably lessthan 1% of the transcription observed in the induced, or de-repressed,state. For purposes of this patent application, "induction" means anincrease in transcription from the formaldehyde-inducible promoter ofmore than 10-fold from its uninduced state and preferably an increase ofgreater than 100-fold. Transcriptional increases as high as about1000-fold are contemplated.

The system is responsive to formaldehyde even at very low levels.Micromolar or higher quantities of formaldehyde are sufficient inaqueous environments to induce the expression system of the presentinvention. Comparable levels are likely sufficient in other environmentsas well. At a lower limit, the system can be induced in the presence ofless than 100 micromolar and more preferably less than 10 micromolarformaldehyde in R. sphaeroides. The lower induction limit is thought tobe less than 1 micromolar (1 ppm), say 0.01 micromolar. In otherorganisms, the induction level may vary, depending upon the thresholdlevel of toxicity of formaldehyde to the organism. It is, of course,understood that the upper and lower induction limits and the window ofeffectiveness are readily determined in any organism using standardanalytical methods.

The invention finds particular utility as a biosensor system by whichthe presence of formaldehyde in an environment is revealed by theregulated production of a detectable protein. If the invention is usedfor formaldehyde detection, a suitable bacterial strain is added to anenvironmental sample to be analyzed, and the sample is monitored forchanges in an indicator gene, as is described in more detail below.

Alternatively, formaldehyde can be converted into other substances topromote a remediating effect upon the environment when the indicatorgene is replaced by a gene that can oxidize formaldehyde. In such amethod, it would be possible to observe a decrease in formaldehyde levelin the environment.

For purposes of this application, a "sample" can be an aliquot suitablefor laboratory analysis, but can equally well be a larger-scale locationfor which remediation is desired, such as a body of water which caninclude, but is not limited to, a water treatment facility, a lake, apond, a river or a stream.

In a related method, the ability to respond to the presence offormaldehyde can also be used to effect production of a desired proteinfor reasons other than formaldehyde detection or remediation. Forexample, it may be desirable to induce one or more cellular pathways todegrade other agents commonly found in formaldehyde-containingenvironments. In such a method, it is also envisioned that a cascade ofsuch responses could be carried out in a single bacterial cell type.

The methods may be practiced by providing the bacterial cells on animmobilized surface or substrate or the cells can be unattached.

In addition to the above-noted methods, the present invention alsoprovides a genetic construct for use in the methods. By providing agenetic construct, transfer of the disclosed system into other organismsis facilitated. The exemplified embodiment of the system describedherein is operative in wild type Rhodobacter sphaeroides, a purple,non-sulfur photosynthetic bacterium typically found in low oxygenaquatic environments and in mutants thereof that retain the relevantgenes as described herein. Moreover, using genetic materials of the typedisclosed herein, it is readily possible to transfer the geneticcomponents of this system into bacterial host cells includingfacultative or strict anaerobes and aerobes that populate, for example,soil, air, high acid (acidophiles), or high salt (halophiles)environments and the like, and into bacterial strains that selectivelypopulate hot and cold temperature environments. Bergey's Manual ofDeterminative Bacteriology, 9th ed., Williams & Wilkins, Baltimore, Md.,John G. Holt, ed. (1994), incorporated herein by reference, is anauthoritative index of known bacteria that includes lists of variousorganisms meeting these criteria. Thus, in addition to using Rhodobactersphaeroides in a remediation or detection assay, other bacterial cellscontaining non-native constructs of the type described herein are alsowithin the scope of the present invention.

A suitable genetic construct includes an indicator or effector geneunder the control of the formaldehyde-inducible promoter, which can be agene suitable for detection or remediation of formaldehyde or any othergene whose product can be detected. If a self-replicating construct isused, the construct also includes those additional elements, such as anorigin of replication and a selectable marker, which are necessary forreplication and maintenance in a bacterial host. Alternative constructscould be incorporated directly into the chromosomal material of the hostorganism. Other genes may also be provided on the construct withoutinterfering with the present invention. The construct can be, forexample, a plasmid, cosmid or phagemid.

It is understood that the formaldehyde-inducibility depends upon boththe promoter and the operably linked cis-acting operator element nearthe promoter (preferably provided within 50 nucleotides, more preferablywithin 25 nucleotides, of the promoter sequence). The operator isthought to be the binding site of the regulatory protein describedelsewhere herein and is also believed to be the inverted repeat sequenceidentified elsewhere herein. The operator, which is encoded on the sameexemplified genetic fragment as the promoter, is physically separablefrom the promoter and has separate utility as a genetic element that maybe placed near any other promoter to confer formaldehyde-inducibilityupon that other promoter. This may be desirable in a particularexpression system where formaldehyde inducibility is desired but where astronger (or weaker) promoter than the one that naturally promotestranscription of the R. sphaeroides adhI-cycI operon is also desired. Itmay also be useful for transfer to other organisms where other promotersare preferred.

For purposes of convenience in this application, all references to theformaldehyde-inducible promoter, or to the "promoter/operator" areintended to include reference to the cis-acting operator sequence, withthe understanding that the two elements, while physically linked, areseparable and contribute separate functionality to the system describedherein. Reference herein to the promoter and operator working togetherto direct transcription are intended to mean that transcription from thepromoter occurs only when the regulatory protein is not bound to thenearby operator sequence, and moreover that when the regulatory proteinis bound to the operator, virtually no transcription from the promotercan take place.

A suitable formaldehyde-inducible promoter region that can be isolatedfrom the upstream portion of an operon from the Rhodobacter sphaeroidesgenome that encodes adhI-cycI, is shown as bases numbered 1-345 of SEQ.ID. NO:1. The portion of the R. sphaeroides genome that contains theadhI-cycI operon is shown schematically in the partial restriction mapof FIG. 1a. The promoter portion of the operon is highlighted in FIG. 2.In vivo, two transcription products covering the adhI-cycI operon areobserved, and, indeed, two genetic segments recognized as havingpromoter activity are present in that portion of SEQ ID NO:1. Relativeto the adhI translational start site (base number 346 of SEQ ID NO:1),the two in vivo transcripts map to positions -267 and -49, whichcorrespond in SEQ ID NO:1 to base numbers 79 and 297, respectively.

Although both promoters may be present in a genetic construct within thescope of the present invention, only the promoter responsible for the-49 transcript is sensitive to the regulatory network described hereinand to the controlling metabolic signals.

The formaldehyde-inducible promoter/operator is under the proximatecontrol of a DNA-binding protein that binds to, and negativelyregulates, the promoter described above, when formaldehyde is absentfrom the environment. Although the specific nucleotides of the operatorthat reversibly interact with the repressor protein have not beendetermined with specificity, an inverted repeat sequence between the -10sequence and the translation start sequence is thought to be the bindingsite of the repressor molecule. The inverted repeat portion is shownbetween bases 289 and 310.

It is not scientifically possible to rule out the possibility that anadditional set of induction proteins may also be involved in inductionof this expression system. Therefore, total induction in the system maybe higher if additional activating proteins are available. In any event,significant induction is observed in the system as described. Work is inprogress to evaluate the likelihood of this possibility.

In view of the preceding analysis of the promoter region, the followingportions of SEQ ID NO:1 are suitable promoter sequences, listed in orderof increasing preference: bases 1 to 345, bases 85 to 345, bases 109 to345, bases 128 to 345, bases 157 to 345, bases 173 to 345, bases 196 to345, bases 220 to 345, and bases 241 to 345. An even smaller portionthat comprises the -10 and -35 regions and the inverted repeat may alsofunction adequately. It is probable that the promoter function residesentirely in the region between bases 1 and 310, and thus, yet morepreferred promoter regions are those identified above in this paragraph,except having a 3' end at base 310 rather than at base 345.

It will be appreciated by one of ordinary skill in the art uponconsideration of this specification that only certain nucleotides of thepromoter region are involved in the interaction with theformaldehyde-inducible regulatory system described herein and that, aslong as the general requirements of all bacterial transcriptionalpromoters such as -35 and -10 sequences (ATGCCG and ATAGGT,respectively, in the exemplified embodiment) are provided, otherportions of the promoter region may be altered, modified or deletedwithout departing from the spirit of the present invention, as long asthe ability to modulate transcription in response to formaldehyde ismaintained. Promoter activity can also be modified, for example, byaltering the -35 and -10 sequences so that they have greater similarityto known consensus sequences.

The promoter can actively promote transcription without additionalcontribution of transcription-enhancing activator sequences, althoughthese may be provided in a suitable construct. Other sequences thatcontribute to transcription are sometimes found in the 5' untranslatedregion upstream from a coding region. Thus, the inventors cannot ruleout the possibility that other sequences upstream from the codingsequence shown in FIG. 1 may contribute to regulation of this promoter.

Likewise, it is also to be appreciated that genetic manipulationtechniques may be applied to the promoter region to alter, particularlyto strengthen, repressor binding. The binding of the repressor to thesite can be altered by substituting bases in the binding site, thoughtto be the inverted repeat. It is also specifically envisioned thatcoordinate changes to both the promoter and its repressor can be madewithout departing from the spirit of the invention. By so modifying thepromoter, an environment is created wherein a very tightly boundrepressor protein further reduces the level of baseline transcriptionwhile the modified -35 and -10 sequences bring about highertranscription levels when the repressor is removed. The net effect willbe an improved signal-to-noise ratio which will facilitate the detectionof even smaller amounts of the target molecule.

It is unknown whether there is a preferred spatial or distancerelationship between the inducible promoter and gene positioneddownstream from the promoter, although the natural spatial relationshipis considered to be preferred.

A vast number of genes can be linked to the inducible promoter. Theselection of a gene for linkage is entirely dependent upon the desiredresponse to the presence of formaldehyde, which may relate to detectionor remediation of formaldehyde or may effect an entirely differentactivity. Generally speaking, a suitable gene is a gene that encodes adetectable protein, referred to herein as an "indicator gene." Forpurposes of this patent application, the term "indicator" or "indicatorgene" is intended to include all bacterial detection systems, withoutregard to whether the molecule detected is a product of the indicatorgene itself or is a substrate for the gene product. The art is repletewith known indicator genes and systems for detecting their transcriptionand any of such genes can be effectively used to monitor activity of theinducible promoter of the present invention. For example, three commonlyused detection systems rely upon the lacZ gene, luciferase gene, and theGreen Fluorescent Protein gene.

The detected molecule can be formaldehyde if the attached indicator geneis gene is a Class III alcohol dehydrogenase enzyme, also called a"glutathione-dependent formaldehyde-dehydrogenase" or "GSH-FDH" enzymecapable of dehydrogenating formaldehyde to other byproducts. Such genesare preferred indicator genes for use in a formaldehyde remediationmethod. Many such GSH-FDH genes are known and have been isolated frombacterial and eukaryotic sources. GSH-FDH genes having activity againstformaldehyde are described, for example by Jornvall, H. et al., Eur. J.Biochem. 167:195 (1987), by Koivusalo, M. and L. Uotila, in Enz. andMol. Biol. of Carbonyl Metabolism 3 and 4, Plenum Press, NY, eds. H.Weiner et al. (1990), by Engeland, K. et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA90:2491 (1993), by Green, et al., J.B.C. 268:7792 (1993), and byEstonius, M. et al., Biochemistry 33:15080 (1994), all of which areincorporated herein by reference. Certain of these publications alsodescribe the modification of other genes by point mutation to bringabout formaldehyde-specific activity. Thus, not only are the classicGSH-FDH enzymes suitable for linkage to the promoter, but it will alsobe understood that other alcohol dehydrogenases, suitably modified canalso be used in a formaldehyde remediation system. The source of thegene is not limiting, as long as the protein encoded by the gene is madeand folded to form a protein that functions as desired in a bacterialhost cell. Any such GSH-FDH gene that can be expressed in a bacterialhost and which confers formaldehyde-specific dehydrogenating activity isacceptable. GSH-FDH enzymes also have activity against long chainhydroxylated fatty acids having between 8 and 16 carbons (e.g.,12-hydroxydodecanoic acid) and long chain alcohols having an alcoholgroup (OH) at the terminal carbon. The system disclosed herein could beadapted to reduce levels of such materials as well.

A suitable GSH-FDH gene is the adhI formaldehyde dehydrogenase gene ofRhodobacter sphaeroides which is co-regulated in vivo with a downstreamgene encoding isocytochrome c₂ (cycI). The sequence of the adhI gene isshown herein as bases 346-1476 of SEQ. ID. NO:1. An arginine residuecorresponding to the arginine at position 110 of AdhI has been shown tobe important for enzymatic activity of other GSH-FDH enzymes againstsome substrates (including formaldehyde) and may be important to theactivity of this gene product as well. Furthermore, AdhI has nine out often residues predicted to be conserved in the substrate binding cleft ofGSH-FDH enzymes.

The adhI gene can be varied by addition, deletion or mutation ofsequences that do not affect formaldehyde dehydrogenation. As evidenceof the variation that is acceptable in such genes, Rhodobactersphaeroides adhI contains an 18 nucleotide long insertion (bases1111-1128) relative to known eukaryotic GSH-FDH genes that does notalter the ability of the encoded enzyme to oxidize formaldehyde.

A preferred repressor protein has the amino acid sequence shown in SEQID NO:4, which shows significant homology to response regulators oftwo-component regulatory systems. The protein sequence likely alsoincludes one or two methionine codons immediately upstream from theindicated sequence. The sequence possesses all of the most highlyconserved residues and many of the lesser-conserved residues of theN-terminal consensus sequence proposed by Volz, Biochemistry 32: 11741(1993). The deduced amino acid sequence also possesses a C-terminal LuxRfamily helix-turn-helix DNA binding motif, shown between amino acids 173and 200 of SEQ ID NO:4. The DNA binding motif and the structuralrelationship to other response regulating portions of two-componentregulatory systems, suggests that this protein binds at or near theformaldehyde-specific promoter, and negatively regulates transcriptionfrom the promoter, as was noted above.

The DNA-binding repressor protein can be provided by a genetic constructcontaining an expressible DNA sequence that encodes a polypeptidecapable of regulating transcription from the formaldehyde specificpromoter. A suitable and preferred DNA fragment that encodes such arepressor molecule is shown in SEQ ID NO 3. It is noted that two ATGmethionine-encoding codons immediately precede the coding sequence andthat one or both likely contribute to the coding portion of thesequence.

Of course it is understood from consideration of this specification,that the entire repressor protein molecule or gene may not be requiredfor formaldehyde-specific regulation. As will become apparent, the onlyrequired amino acids of the regulator protein (or the correspondingnucleic acid sequences in a genetic construct encoding such a protein)are the portions of the protein used for DNA binding at or near thepromoter region and the portions used for receiving a phosphorylationsignal from a formaldehyde-specific sensor molecule. All modifications,alterations, or deletions of the repressor molecule that do nototherwise interfere with the ability of the molecule to function asdescribed are intended to fall within the scope of the presentinvention. It is believed that the binding portion of the repressorprotein molecule is the helix-turn-helix portion between amino acids 173and 200 of SEQ ID NO:4. It is further believed that the site ofphosphorylation is the aspartate residue at amino acid 62 of the proteinshown in SEQ ID NO:4, encoded by the triplet that begins at base 398 ofSEQ ID NO:3.

The next aspect of the invention is the ability to sense the presence ofenvironmental formaldehyde in a sample and to direct a signal to therepressor protein in response thereto. In one embodiment of the systemdisclosed herein, formaldehyde recognition is provided by aformaldehyde-dependent kinase sensor molecule that transphosphorylatesthe regulator component of the two-component regulatory system afterexposure to formaldehyde. A suitable preliminary gene sequence, whichencodes such a protein is shown in SEQ ID NO:5. Although it is believedthat the entire sequence of SEQ ID NO:5 is a coding sequence, the entiresequence has not been so designated because the sequence presented ispreliminary. However, it has been determined that an internal portion ofthe presented sequence (between bases 2113 to 2400) corresponds well toa conserved portion of other known sensor proteins. The translatedportion is shown in SEQ ID NO:6. Based upon this comparative analysis,it is expected that the portion of the molecule having specificity forformaldehyde will be encoded by the first 2000, and more likely by thefirst 1500, bases of SEQ ID NO:5.

The available sequence data and restriction map are sufficient to permitone of ordinary skill, using routine techniques of molecular biology, toobtain the gene encoding the sensor protein by preparing and usingprobes complementary to the presented sequence of SEQ ID NO:5,particularly to the first 2000 or first 1500 bases. The nature ofprobing is such that the few mismatches that might arise from aninaccuracy in the presented sequence would not prevent one fromobtaining the desired gene.

In nature, the gene encoding the sensor protein and the gene encodingthe repressor protein are linked members of a single operon. FIG. 2shows a partial restriction map of genomic clone pUI8017 that containsthe gene that encodes the repressor protein (tentatively named SpdR) andthe gene that encodes the sensor protein (tentatively named SpdS). Thisportion of a bacterial genome can be obtained by using a genetic probecorresponding to the exemplified sequence or any portion thereof. Sinceorganisms may contain genes related to the spdr and spds genes, suitableprobing stringency conditions should be determined that detect only thedesired gene regions.

Near the carboxy terminal end of the sensor protein sequence, at aminoacid 19 of SEQ ID NO:6, is a histidine residue that isautophosphorylated. The phosphate is then transferred to an aspartateresidue of the DNA-bound repressor molecule described elsewhere herein.Because the phosphorylated repressor molecule has reduced ability tobind to the promoter/operator region, its attachment to the DNA isreduced, facilitating transcription of the operably-linked gene.

It is understood by those of ordinary skill that certain variation inthe size or sequence of the sensor protein (and in the correspondinggenetic material encoding the sensor protein) will not interfere withthe functions thereof. Such changes, modifications, additions anddeletions are contemplated to fall within the scope of the presentinvention, as long as the protein retains a competentformaldehyde-sensing portion and an effector portion.

The competence of the inducible system can be judged by any measure ofincreased transcription of the operably linked indicator gene. Increasedtranscription can be measured directly by measuring RNA level, orindirectly by observing an increase in the level of the protein encodedby the indicator gene. Alternatively, a change in an indicator moleculeaffected by the attached gene can be measured. Such a change can be incolor, concentration, fluorescence, optical density or other attribute.

The preferred promoter DNA, repressor coding sequence (and correspondingprotein sequence), and sensor coding sequence (and corresponding proteinsequence) were isolated and purified from the genome of wild typeRhodobacter sphaeroides. It is believed that, using this specificationas a guide, the promoter, the sensor, and/or the repressor within thescope of the present invention can now readily be purified from otherorganisms capable of growth on formaldehyde or on a carbon source thatcan be degraded to formaldehyde, such as methanol. Thus, the inventionis not limited to these molecules prepared or obtained from a particularsource. Rather, one of ordinary skill, using routine techniques forlocating DNA that is structurally related at a sequence level, canprepare a sequence specific probing strategy, such as a PCR probeanalysis, to retrieve these sequences from other Rhodobacter sphaeroidesstrains, other Rhodospirillaceae, other bacterial organisms, and a widevariety of eukaryotic organisms known to have mechanisms forformaldehyde oxidation.

Formaldehyde oxidation is ubiquitous and GSH-FDH enzymes are found inmany organisms. Such organisms are considered likely to contain suchGSH-FDH genes and may contain the regulatory genes as well. Also,formaldehyde dehydrogenase activity has been observed informaldehyde-resistant Enterobacteriaceae. Kaulfer, P. and A. Marquardt,FEMS Microbiol. Letters 79:335-338 (1991). Bacterial, plant, yeast, andanimal (including human) GSH-FDH enzymes have been shown to catalyze theNAD-dependent oxidation of HMGSH and long chain hydroxylated fatty acidsand alcohols. The nucleic acid sequence of a GSH-FDH gene fromParacoccus denitrificans has recently been reported by Ras, et al., J.Bact. 177:247-251 (1995), that shares 89% amino acid identity and 95%amino acid similarity to AdhI of Rhodobacter sphaeroides, and ispredicted to be a useful effector gene for linkage to the induciblepromoter of this system.

While identical sequences isolated from a different organism wouldcertainly come within the scope of the present invention, it is alsounderstood that complete structural relatedness is not necessary. As hasbeen described above for each element, only that level of structuralrelatedness sufficient to maintain the functionality of the invention isrequired. It is contemplated and understood that certain nucleic acidsubstitutions in the operator, promoter, indicator gene, sensor gene andrepressor gene have no effect or only moderate effect upon proteinproduction and function. Indeed, given the well understood redundancy inthe genetic code, certain nucleic acid substitutions are completelysilent with respect to encoded protein sequences. All such substitutionsto any of the various genetic constructs and proteins described hereinare within the scope of the present invention.

It is not necessary that the components of the formaldehyde-inducibleexpression system be obtained from a single source, but rather,individual elements can be obtained from disparate sources or can besynthesized in vitro. It is also understood that, although the sequencespresented herein are the preferred sequences known to the inventors forcarrying out the invention, it is specifically envisioned that strainscarrying mutations in any element of the system may be sought, usingtechniques available to those skilled in the art, to optimize the effectof the described expression system upon the promoter.

It is also envisioned that on the basis of this disclosure, the geneticcomponents of this expression system can be created or combined in anycombination in vitro using well understood tools available to amolecular biologist. It is routine to construct an expressible geneconstruct incorporating a promoter operably linked upstream (5') to acoding region encoding an indicator protein of interest. A suitablepromoter sequence is provided which can direct the inducibletranscription of any attached gene. To achieve the desired inducibleregulatory effect in the disclosed system, it is desirable, in theuninduced state, that there be virtually no transcription of the gene ofinterest. Accordingly, it is desired that an amount of the repressormolecule be available to effectively keep the promoter inactive inbacterial host cells in which the system is operative. Thus, expressionof the gene encoding the repressor molecule can be under thetranscriptional control of a constitutive promoter. Since the sensorprotein is required to sense formaldehyde in the environment and sincethe regulatory system does not induce appreciable transcription untilformaldehyde is detected, the gene encoding the sensor protein can alsobe expressed constitutively in the bacterial host cells and can be underthe transcriptional control of any promoter that can direct thetranscription of the repressor protein. A suitable promoter can bedetermined for each strain into which the system will be introduced. Forexample, the E. coli P_(lac) promoter is functional in many, but notall, bacterial cell hosts.

It is further envisioned that if the expression system of the presentinvention is incorporated into a larger regulatory scheme, it iscertainly possible to regulate the expression of the sensor orregulatory proteins as desired by selecting other promoters to governtranscription in a non-constitutive manner.

The present invention will be more completely understood uponconsideration of the following Examples which are intended to beexemplary and in no way limiting on the invention.

EXAMPLES Bacterial Strains, Plasmids and Growth Conditions

Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this work are listed in Table 1.E. coli strains were grown at 37° C. in Luria-Bertani medium. R.sphaeroides strains were grown in Sistrom's minimal medium A (37) at 32°C. Supplements were sterilized separately and added at the followingconcentrations: ampicillin, 100 μg/ml; tetracycline, 1 μg/ml for R.sphaeroides and 10 μg/ml for E. coli; spectinomycin, 25 μg/ml/ andisopropyl-β-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG), 1 mM.

DNA Sequence Analysis

DNA sequencing with Taq DNA polymerase (Promega, Inc., Madison, Wis.)was performed as suggested by the manufacturer with deaza nucleosidetriphosphate reagent kits. Most of the DNA sequence was obtained withlac specific primers and double-stranded derivatives of pUC18 or pUC19vectors. Primers specific to R. sphaeroides DNA were used to aid inanalyzing regions with strong secondary structure or to complete thegeneration of double-stranded DNA sequence. DNA and the subsequentprotein sequence were analyzed with software from Genetics ComputerGroup, Madison, Wis. The DNA sequence fragment from the BamHI to SalIrestriction endonuclease sites shown in FIG. 1 (SEQ ID NO:1) will beavailable in the Genome Sequence Data Base under accession numberL47326.

GSH-FDH Activity Assays

GSH-FDH activity can be detected in crude cell extracts using thefollowing detection scheme. Cultures of either R. sphaeroides orIPTG-induced E. coli cells can be grown aerobically to late log-earlystationary phase, harvested (8,000×g), and washed with 150 mM sodiumphosphate buffer (pH 8.5). Cell pellets can be stored at -20° C. untilthe assay is performed. Prior to lysis, the thawed cell pellet issuspended in 5 ml of 150 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 8.5) containing0.1% phenylmethylsulfonylfluoride as a protease inhibitor. The cells arelysed by two passes through a French press at 18,000 psi, DNase is addedto a final concentration of 5 μg/ml, and the lysate is incubated on icefor 30 minutes. Cell debris is removed by centrifugation at 10,000×g for15 minutes and the supernatant is assayed for GSH-FDH activity. Proteinconcentrations can be determined by the SDS modification of the Folinphenol method using bovine serum albumin as a standard.

Assays for GSH-FDH activity using S-hydroxy methylglutathione (HMGSH) asa substrate can be performed as described by Uotila and Koviusalo,Methods Enzymol. 77:314-320 (1981), with the following modifications:the final concentration of sodium phosphate buffer (pH 8.5) is 150 mM,the final concentration of NAD is 1 mM, and 0.01 to 1 mg of crude cellextract protein is added. A typical assay using other potential GSH-FDHsubstrates includes a volume of cell extract (containing 0.1 to 1 mgtotal protein), 150 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 8.5), 1 mM NAD as anelectron acceptor, and appropriate concentration of substrate 1 mM forlong chain (>5 aliphatic carbons) alcohols and acids, 0.2M to 1M forshort chain (<5 aliphatic carbons) alcohols!. In all cases, enzymeactivity can be measured spectrophotometrically by the time-dependentreduction of NAD and corresponding increase in absorbance at 340 nm atroom temperature using a SLM DW2000 spectrophotometer. A unit of GSH-FDHactivity is defined as the amount of enzyme required to reduce 1 μmoleof NAD per minute.

The size of an active GSH-FDH protein can be determined by activity gelelectrophoresis. Following native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis,zymograms for GSH-FDH activity can be obtained by adding a half volumeof a loading solution, containing 40% (w/v) sucrose plus a trace ofbromophenol blue to an appropriate volume of cell extract prior toloading the gel. Proteins can be separated on a 5% stacking gel and 10%separating gel using Tris-HCl buffer (pH 8.3) in the gel andTris-glycine buffer (pH 8.8) in the electrode vessels with an appliedcurrent of 10-20 mA/gel at 4° C. for a minimum of 14 hours.

Following electrophoresis, the gel is stained for GSH-FDH activity usinga solution of 70 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 7.5); 500 mM KCl; 1.2 mMNAD; 4.8 mM formaldehyde; 1 mM glutathione; 0.4 mg/ml nitrobluetetrazolium and 0.03 mg/ml phenylmethylsulfate with gentle shaking at37° C. Enzyme activity can be visualized in less than an hour and thegel can be rinsed in distilled water prior to photographing.

Promoter Isolation

The location of the promoters upstream from the R. sphaeroides adhI genewere determined by primer extension analysis. RNA from aerobic R.sphaeroides cultures was prepared as previously described by Zhu andKaplan, J. Bacteriol. 162:925-932 (1985). An oligonucleotide(4'-ATTGACCTCCATGATCTCGA-3') (SEQ ID NO:7) complementary to a region 42nucleotides downstream of the adhI translational start codon was usedfor primer extension assays (Genosys, The Woodlands, Tex.). Primer (25pmole) and RNA (15 μg) were hybridized at 45° C. for 15 minutes; then asolution of nucleotide triphosphates, reverse transcriptase, andactinomycin D was added and incubated for 30 minutes at 45° C. Thereaction was stopped by adding a formamide-EDTA loading buffer. Sampleswere boiled prior to loading on a 6% denaturing polyacrylamide gel.Putative transcription initiation sites were mapped by comparison to DNAsequencing reactions generated with the same primer on an adhI template.

Preference for Induction by Formaldehyde

FIG. 3 depicts the activity of the full-length adhI promoter when thepromoter is fused to an indicator gene (lacZ). Wild type cells carryingthe full length adhI promoter region fused to lacZ were grown to mid-logphase. Then, either methanol or formaldehyde was added to the media andbeta-galactosidase was measured during a three hour time course. Withoutany inducer, activity of LacZ encoded by the test construct was low andinvariant over time. In contrast, in the presence of 25 μM formaldehyde,the lacZ gene was induced to produce as much as about 425 lacZ activityunits (nMol/min/OD600) by about 90 minutes. This rate was maintained forat least another 1.5 hours. Using 100 mM methanol as the inducer, ittook almost 3 hours to reach this level of LacZ activity.

To demonstrate the specificity of the response, the control included acycA gene operably fused to the E. coli lacZ gene.

    __________________________________________________________________________    SEQUENCE LISTING                                                              (1) GENERAL INFORMATION:                                                      (iii) NUMBER OF SEQUENCES: 7                                                  (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:1:                                              (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:                                                 (A) LENGTH: 2408 base pairs                                                   (B) TYPE: nucleic acid                                                        (C) STRANDEDNESS: double                                                      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear                                                          (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic)                                             (vi) ORIGINAL SOURCE:                                                         (A) ORGANISM: Rhodobacter sphaeroides                                         (B) STRAIN: 2.4.1                                                             (ix) FEATURE:                                                                 (A) NAME/KEY: -35.sub.-- signal                                               (B) LOCATION: 262..267                                                        (ix) FEATURE:                                                                 (A) NAME/KEY: -10.sub.-- signal                                               (B) LOCATION: 285..290                                                        (ix) FEATURE:                                                                 (A) NAME/KEY: CDS                                                             (B) LOCATION: 346..1476                                                       (D) OTHER INFORMATION: /product="AdhI Class III Alcohol                       Dehydrogenase Gene"                                                           (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:1:                                       GATCCGCGCGGCTGCGCGAGCTGGGGCTCGAGCCCTACGATGCGCTCTCGCCGCCCCTGA60                TGGATGCGATCGCGACCCATGTCGCGAAACGCTCCGGCAAGCTCGCGGCCTGAGGGCTGC120               GGCCGCTCCCTCCCGCGAGGCGGGGAGCGGCTTCTTCTGAACGTGCCGGGCGCGGTCCGA180               TGGCGGCAGGCCTGCCGACGCGGGACCCCCGCAGGCTTTCGCCGCAGAGGCAAGACCCGC240               GCTCCTCATCCTTTTTTCCGAATGCCGGGCGCGGATTTTCCTCTTAAGGTCAGGCCATGA300               CAGGCCCGACGCCCTGCCGTCCGGTTGATTGAGAGGGAGAGTAACATGCGCACC354                     MetArgThr                                                                     CGTGCCGCCGTCGCCGTCGAGGCCGGCAAGCCGCTCGAGATCATGGAG402                           ArgAlaAlaValAlaValGluAlaGlyLysProLeuGluIleMetGlu                              51015                                                                         GTCAATCTCGAAGGCCCCAAGGCCGGCGAGGTCATGGTCGAGATCAAG450                           ValAsnLeuGluGlyProLysAlaGlyGluValMetValGluIleLys                              20253035                                                                      GCCACCGGCATCTGCCACACCGACGAATTCACCCTCTCCGGCGCCGAT498                           AlaThrGlyIleCysHisThrAspGluPheThrLeuSerGlyAlaAsp                              404550                                                                        CCCGAGGGCATGTTCCCGGCGATCCTCGGCCACGAGGGCGCGGGCGTG546                           ProGluGlyMetPheProAlaIleLeuGlyHisGluGlyAlaGlyVal                              556065                                                                        GTGGTCGAGGTCGGCCCCGGCGTGACCAGCGTGAAGCCCGGCGATCAT594                           ValValGluValGlyProGlyValThrSerValLysProGlyAspHis                              707580                                                                        GTGATCCCGCTCTACACGCCCGAGTGCCGGCAGTGCCCCTCCTGCCTC642                           ValIleProLeuTyrThrProGluCysArgGlnCysProSerCysLeu                              859095                                                                        AGCCAGAAGACGAACCTCTGCACCGCGATCCGCGGCACGCAGGGGCAG690                           SerGlnLysThrAsnLeuCysThrAlaIleArgGlyThrGlnGlyGln                              100105110115                                                                  GGGCTGATGCCCGACGGCACCAGCCGCTTCTCGATGCTCGATGGCACG738                           GlyLeuMetProAspGlyThrSerArgPheSerMetLeuAspGlyThr                              120125130                                                                     CCGATCCTGCATTACATGGGCTGCTCGACCTTCTCGAACTACACGGTC786                           ProIleLeuHisTyrMetGlyCysSerThrPheSerAsnTyrThrVal                              135140145                                                                     CTGCCCGAGATCGCGGTGGCGAAGGTGCGCCCGGATGCGCCCTTCGAC834                           LeuProGluIleAlaValAlaLysValArgProAspAlaProPheAsp                              150155160                                                                     AAGATCTGCTACATCGGCTGCGGCGTCACCACCGGCATCGGCGCGGTC882                           LysIleCysTyrIleGlyCysGlyValThrThrGlyIleGlyAlaVal                              165170175                                                                     ATCAACACGGCCAAGGTCGAGATCGGCGCCAAGGCCGTGGTGTTCGGG930                           IleAsnThrAlaLysValGluIleGlyAlaLysAlaValValPheGly                              180185190195                                                                  CTGGGCGGCATCGGTCTCAACGTGATCCAGGGCCTGAAGCTCGCGGGC978                           LeuGlyGlyIleGlyLeuAsnValIleGlnGlyLeuLysLeuAlaGly                              200205210                                                                     GCCGACATGATCATCGGCGTGGATCTGAACAACGCCAAGAAGGAATGG1026                          AlaAspMetIleIleGlyValAspLeuAsnAsnAlaLysLysGluTrp                              215220225                                                                     GGCGAGCGCTTCGGCATGACCCATTTCGTGAATCCGTCCGAGATCGAC1074                          GlyGluArgPheGlyMetThrHisPheValAsnProSerGluIleAsp                              230235240                                                                     GGCGATGTGGTGGCGCATCTGGTCAATATGACCAAGACGCCCTTCGAC1122                          GlyAspValValAlaHisLeuValAsnMetThrLysThrProPheAsp                              245250255                                                                     CAGATCGGCGGGGCGGACTACACCTTCGACTGCACCGGCAACGTGAAG1170                          GlnIleGlyGlyAlaAspTyrThrPheAspCysThrGlyAsnValLys                              260265270275                                                                  GTGATGCGTCAGGCGCTGGAGGCGTGCCATCGTGGCTGGGGCCAGTCG1218                          ValMetArgGlnAlaLeuGluAlaCysHisArgGlyTrpGlyGlnSer                              280285290                                                                     ATCGTGATCGGTGTGGCGCCGGCGGGGGCCGAGATCCAGACGCGGCCG1266                          IleValIleGlyValAlaProAlaGlyAlaGluIleGlnThrArgPro                              295300305                                                                     TTCCAGCTGGTGACGGGGCGGGTCTGGAAGGGCTCGGCCTTCGGCGGC1314                          PheGlnLeuValThrGlyArgValTrpLysGlySerAlaPheGlyGly                              310315320                                                                     GCGCGCGGCCGGACCGACGTGCCGAAGATCGTCGACTGGTACATGGAG1362                          AlaArgGlyArgThrAspValProLysIleValAspTrpTyrMetGlu                              325330335                                                                     GGCAAGATCCAGATCGACCCGATGATCACCCACATCCTGAGCCTCGAA1410                          GlyLysIleGlnIleAspProMetIleThrHisIleLeuSerLeuGlu                              340345350355                                                                  GAGATCAACAAGGGCTTCGACCTCATGCACGCGGGCGAGTCCATCCGC1458                          GluIleAsnLysGlyPheAspLeuMetHisAlaGlyGluSerIleArg                              360365370                                                                     TCGGTCGTGGTGTTCTGATCGGCCACCCCTCCAAGACGGTGACGATTT1506                          SerValValValPhe*                                                              375                                                                           CCCGAGTAACGGTGCCAGCGACCCGGCCGGTCCCTTGACCGGCCGCGGGCGGCCTGCCGC1566              GCAGGACGCCCCCGAGCCATCCGCAAAGGGAGAAGACCATGAGATTGACCACCATCCTCG1626              CCGGGGCGCTCGCTCTCGGTGCCGCGCAGGCCGCCTTCGCCGAAGGCGACCCGGCGGCCG1686              GCGAGAAGGCCTTCCGGAAATGTCAGGCCTGCCACCAGATCGGCGCCGAGGCGCAGAACA1746              AGACCGGGCCCGTCCTGACCGGCGTCATCGGTCGCCCGGCGGCCTCGATCGAGGGCTTCA1806              GCTATTCCAAGACCCTGACCGAGGCCGCGGCCGATGGCCTCGTCTGGGATCATGCTGCGC1866              TCGAGACCTTCCTGGCCAATCCGCGCAAGGCGATGCCGGGCACCAAGATGGCCTTCCCCG1926              GCATCAAGAAACCGCAGGAGCTGGCCGACATCCTGGCCTATCTCGACACCTTCTCGGACG1986              GGGAAACGCGGGAGGCCGAAGAGACCCCCGCGGCGGCGCCGGCGGAGGGCTGAAATGCCT2046              GTCTGCCAAGGCTTTCGCCCTCGTCATGGCGCCACCGGCGATCGTCATACTTTGGGCTTA2106              AAGCGGGACCGCAGCGTTAACGCTTCAAATCGGCGCGCCGTAGCATGAGGTTCGGTGACA2166              GGTCGGCAGCTCCGGGGAGGGAGCCGCGACCGGTGAAGATCACGAGCCAATTTCAAGAAA2226              TCAACATCGGGAGGAGCCAATGAAGATGCTGAAGACGGGTCTCGTAGCGACCCTATTGCT2286              CTCGTCTCGCGGCCAGAACGGTTGCTGAGCCAGGAGTTCCGCTGGCTGCTAGGCTTCGTC2346              ACCCGCTAGGTCTGGCCGCTTGATACGGTTGTGGGCGATAAGGCTCGACTTGGTCTAGTG2406              GG2408                                                                        (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:2:                                              (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:                                                 (A) LENGTH: 376 amino acids                                                   (B) TYPE: amino acid                                                          (D) TOPOLOGY: linear                                                          (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: protein                                                   (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:2:                                       MetArgThrArgAlaAlaValAlaValGluAlaGlyLysProLeuGlu                              151015                                                                        IleMetGluValAsnLeuGluGlyProLysAlaGlyGluValMetVal                              202530                                                                        GluIleLysAlaThrGlyIleCysHisThrAspGluPheThrLeuSer                              354045                                                                        GlyAlaAspProGluGlyMetPheProAlaIleLeuGlyHisGluGly                              505560                                                                        AlaGlyValValValGluValGlyProGlyValThrSerValLysPro                              65707580                                                                      GlyAspHisValIleProLeuTyrThrProGluCysArgGlnCysPro                              859095                                                                        SerCysLeuSerGlnLysThrAsnLeuCysThrAlaIleArgGlyThr                              100105110                                                                     GlnGlyGlnGlyLeuMetProAspGlyThrSerArgPheSerMetLeu                              115120125                                                                     AspGlyThrProIleLeuHisTyrMetGlyCysSerThrPheSerAsn                              130135140                                                                     TyrThrValLeuProGluIleAlaValAlaLysValArgProAspAla                              145150155160                                                                  ProPheAspLysIleCysTyrIleGlyCysGlyValThrThrGlyIle                              165170175                                                                     GlyAlaValIleAsnThrAlaLysValGluIleGlyAlaLysAlaVal                              180185190                                                                     ValPheGlyLeuGlyGlyIleGlyLeuAsnValIleGlnGlyLeuLys                              195200205                                                                     LeuAlaGlyAlaAspMetIleIleGlyValAspLeuAsnAsnAlaLys                              210215220                                                                     LysGluTrpGlyGluArgPheGlyMetThrHisPheValAsnProSer                              225230235240                                                                  GluIleAspGlyAspValValAlaHisLeuValAsnMetThrLysThr                              245250255                                                                     ProPheAspGlnIleGlyGlyAlaAspTyrThrPheAspCysThrGly                              260265270                                                                     AsnValLysValMetArgGlnAlaLeuGluAlaCysHisArgGlyTrp                              275280285                                                                     GlyGlnSerIleValIleGlyValAlaProAlaGlyAlaGluIleGln                              290295300                                                                     ThrArgProPheGlnLeuValThrGlyArgValTrpLysGlySerAla                              305310315320                                                                  PheGlyGlyAlaArgGlyArgThrAspValProLysIleValAspTrp                              325330335                                                                     TyrMetGluGlyLysIleGlnIleAspProMetIleThrHisIleLeu                              340345350                                                                     SerLeuGluGluIleAsnLysGlyPheAspLeuMetHisAlaGlyGlu                              355360365                                                                     SerIleArgSerValValValPhe                                                      370375                                                                        (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:3:                                              (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:                                                 (A) LENGTH: 1058 base pairs                                                   (B) TYPE: nucleic acid                                                        (C) STRANDEDNESS: double                                                      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear                                                          (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic)                                             (vi) ORIGINAL SOURCE:                                                         (A) ORGANISM: Rhodobacter sphaeroides                                         (B) STRAIN: 2.4.1                                                             (vii) IMMEDIATE SOURCE:                                                       (B) CLONE: pUI8017                                                            (ix) FEATURE:                                                                 (A) NAME/KEY: CDS                                                             (B) LOCATION: 221..895                                                        (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:3:                                       GGATCCGGGCATGCCTGCGGCCGAAGGATGCGGGAACCGTCCGCACCGACAGATGCGCGA60                ACCGTATGGCCGGCCGGGAAGTGGGGGGCTCCGCTCTCTCGGTAAGAACAGGTCGGTCGC120               GCCGTAGCGGCAAGGGCGCCGGTGCTCCGACCTTTGGCCGGGTTATCGCGTCAGGCGGAT180               GTGCTAGCCTCGTGAAAAGACGTATGGGACCGCCATGATGCAACCTTCCCGC232                       GlnProSerArg                                                                  1                                                                             CCGCTCCAGTCCGCGCTGATCGTCGACGATCATCCGCTCTTCTGCGAT280                           ProLeuGlnSerAlaLeuIleValAspAspHisProLeuPheCysAsp                              5101520                                                                       GCGCTGTCGATGACGCTCAAGGCGGTGGCGGGACTGACCCACATCGAA328                           AlaLeuSerMetThrLeuLysAlaValAlaGlyLeuThrHisIleGlu                              253035                                                                        TCCGCCGACCGGCTCGAGACCGCTCTGGCCCGGCTCGACCTGCAGCCG376                           SerAlaAspArgLeuGluThrAlaLeuAlaArgLeuAspLeuGlnPro                              404550                                                                        GCGTTCGATGTGGTGGTGCTGGATCTGAACCTGCCGGACGTGAACGGC424                           AlaPheAspValValValLeuAspLeuAsnLeuProAspValAsnGly                              556065                                                                        CTCGACGGCCTCATCCGTCTGAAGGCGAGCCCCGGGGCGGTGCCGGTG472                           LeuAspGlyLeuIleArgLeuLysAlaSerProGlyAlaValProVal                              707580                                                                        GTGGTGGTCTCTTCCCTCGCCGACAACCGGGTGATCGGGGCGGCGCTG520                           ValValValSerSerLeuAlaAspAsnArgValIleGlyAlaAlaLeu                              859095100                                                                     AAGGCGGGTGCGGCGGGCTTCGTGCCCAAGCACTCCCGCCGCGAGGTG568                           LysAlaGlyAlaAlaGlyPheValProLysHisSerArgArgGluVal                              105110115                                                                     TTCCGCGCGGCCTTCGATGCGATCCGCGAAGGGCGCAGCTACCTGCCC616                           PheArgAlaAlaPheAspAlaIleArgGluGlyArgSerTyrLeuPro                              120125130                                                                     GAAGATTCACGCCTCATTCCCCCGGGCGCGCCCGCCAGCCAGCGCGAG664                           GluAspSerArgLeuIleProProGlyAlaProAlaSerGlnArgGlu                              135140145                                                                     GAAGCCATCGCACGGCTTGCGCTCGTCACGCGGCAGCAGGCGAAGATC712                           GluAlaIleAlaArgLeuAlaLeuValThrArgGlnGlnAlaLysIle                              150155160                                                                     CTCCAGCTCATCTGCGAGGGGCGGCTGAACAAGCAGATCGCCTATGAC760                           LeuGlnLeuIleCysGluGlyArgLeuAsnLysGlnIleAlaTyrAsp                              165170175180                                                                  CTGACCATCGCCGAGACGACCGTGAAGGCCCATGTCACGGCCATTATG808                           LeuThrIleAlaGluThrThrValLysAlaHisValThrAlaIleMet                              185190195                                                                     CGCAAGCTCGGCGTCCAGAGCCGGACCCAGGCGGTGCTCATGGTGCAG856                           ArgLysLeuGlyValGlnSerArgThrGlnAlaValLeuMetValGln                              200205210                                                                     GAGGCGAGCTTCGCGAGCCTGATGCCGGAAAATTCCTGACAGCCGGTTG905                          GluAlaSerPheAlaSerLeuMetProGluAsnSer*                                         215220                                                                        GGCAGCGGCTGCGCGCTTCGGGGGCCTGTCGAACGGCTTGTCAGCCGTTGCGGGCAGCAG965               ATTAGGTTTGCTGGCTGGGAGGACGGCGATGGAAGGAACTTCGCGAGCGGCGCCGGTCGC1025              GGCGGAGGCGAACGGCGCCCCGCTGGTGCGGAG1058                                         (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:4:                                              (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:                                                 (A) LENGTH: 224 amino acids                                                   (B) TYPE: amino acid                                                          (D) TOPOLOGY: linear                                                          (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: protein                                                   (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:4:                                       GlnProSerArgProLeuGlnSerAlaLeuIleValAspAsp                                    1510                                                                          HisProLeuPheCysAspAlaLeuSerMetThrLeuLysAlaValAla                              15202530                                                                      GlyLeuThrHisIleGluSerAlaAspArgLeuGluThrAlaLeuAla                              354045                                                                        ArgLeuAspLeuGlnProAlaPheAspValValValLeuAspLeuAsn                              505560                                                                        LeuProAspValAsnGlyLeuAspGlyLeuIleArgLeuLysAlaSer                              657075                                                                        ProGlyAlaValProValValValValSerSerLeuAlaAspAsnArg                              808590                                                                        ValIleGlyAlaAlaLeuLysAlaGlyAlaAlaGlyPheValProLys                              95100105110                                                                   HisSerArgArgGluValPheArgAlaAlaPheAspAlaIleArgGlu                              115120125                                                                     GlyArgSerTyrLeuProGluAspSerArgLeuIleProProGlyAla                              130135140                                                                     ProAlaSerGlnArgGluGluAlaIleAlaArgLeuAlaLeuValThr                              145150155                                                                     ArgGlnGlnAlaLysIleLeuGlnLeuIleCysGluGlyArgLeuAsn                              160165170                                                                     LysGlnIleAlaTyrAspLeuThrIleAlaGluThrThrValLysAla                              175180185190                                                                  HisValThrAlaIleMetArgLysLeuGlyValGlnSerArgThrGln                              195200205                                                                     AlaValLeuMetValGlnGluAlaSerPheAlaSerLeuMetProGlu                              210215220                                                                     AsnSer                                                                        (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:5:                                              (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:                                                 (A) LENGTH: 2563 base pairs                                                   (B) TYPE: nucleic acid                                                        (C) STRANDEDNESS: double                                                      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear                                                          (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic)                                             (vi) ORIGINAL SOURCE:                                                         (A) ORGANISM: Rhodobacter sphaeroides                                         (B) STRAIN: 2.4.1                                                             (vii) IMMEDIATE SOURCE:                                                       (B) CLONE: pUI8017                                                            (ix) FEATURE:                                                                 (A) NAME/KEY: CDS                                                             (B) LOCATION: 2113..2400                                                      (D) OTHER INFORMATION: /product="Partial Sensor Coding                        Sequence"                                                                     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:5:                                       GGCGACTATCAGCGCCGAGGGCTATACCGAAGGCAGGTGGTGGCGGTGGCGCTTCCCGCC60                GCCCATTTCCACGTCCGGCCCATCCTGATCGGGGCTTTGGCCGATCTCGACCGCGAGGAA120               CTGATCGGCCGCCTCATCCGCGAGCGGGATCTGGCGCGCGAGCGGCCCGACTGGGCCGCG180               AATTCCGCCTTCCTCATGGTGGACGGGCTGTCGACGCGCGAGGACGAACTGGCCTCGACG240               CTCGCCGCGGGGCTGGGGCCGGTGCCGCTCTTCGGCGGCTCGGCCGCGAACGGGTGCGCT300               GGCGCGAGACCTTCGTGATCCATGGCGCCGATGTCCTGAGGGACGCGGCGGTGCTGGCGC360               TGGTGCGGAGACTGCCGGGTGCGGGTGTTCAACCTCGACCATTTCCGCCCCACCGATCAG420               CGCATGGTCGTCACCGAGGCCGATCCCGCGCGCCGCATCGTGCGCCGGATCAATGCGCGG480               CGCAGGAATATCGCCCGGCTGCTCGGCAAGGATCCGGGGCAGCTCGACAGCTTCACCTTC540               GCGGCCCATCCGGTGGTGGTGCGGATCGGCGGCAAGCATCACGTCCGCGCCATCCGCGAG600               GTCGCGCCGAACGCGATCTCGTCGGCTTTCCGCATCGACGAGGGGCTGGTGCTTGCCCTG660               GCCGAACCGCAGGATCTCGTCGGGCATCTGACGGACGAGCTGGCGGGGCTGGGCGCGCGA720               GGCGAGCCCTCGGCCATTGTCGCGTGCGATTGCGTGCTGCGCCGGATGGAGGCGCTCGAC780               AGCCAGTCCATCGGGGCGGTCTCGGCCCTTCTGCGGCGGCATCGCGTGGTGGGCTTCTCG840               ACCTACGGCGAGCAGCTGAACGGGAATGCATGTATGCATGTGAACCAGACCATGACCGGG900               GTCGCGATCTACCCGCCGGGAGGAGCGATGAGGGCGGGCCGGGGCGGTGACCTGCGTCCC960               AGTGGGGGAAGGACCATGCGCCACGCGGAGCGGAGCGACATGAGCCTTCCTCTGATCGAT1020              CCCAGCGATCCGCCCGAGCGACAGGCGACAAGCTTCTCGAGATCGTGCGCGCGCTGATGG1080              CGCGGGTGGAGCGCTCGACCGACGACGCGTGCCAGGCTATGCGCAGTCCAGCGCGCCGCC1140              ATGCTCGAGGATCAGGTGCGCGAGGCACAGCGGATCTGCCAGCGCACGCTGGAACTGCTG1200              AACCTCTCGAACGAGCGGCTGGCGGAAGCCACGCGCGCGGCCGACCAGGTGCGCCAGAAC1260              CTCGCCAATGCCATCGAGACGGTGCAGGAGGGCTTCGCGCTCTTGGATGCCGACGATGTG1320              CTCGTGCTGTGCAATTTTCCGCGCTTCGGGATGCACATGCTCGACATTCAGGAGCATCTG1380              AGGCCCGGCCTCTCGCTTCGGCGGCTATATCGACCGCTTGAGCGTTCGCGGTATCTGGCG1440              CTGCCCGAGGCGGAGACACCCGAGGATTTGGGCGGTCCGGCGCAAGCGCGGCACTACGAC1500              CCCCATTCGATCTTCAACGTGCGGCTGATCTGGGACCGCTGGCTGCAGGTCTCCGAGCAT1560              CGGACGGCCGATGGCGGCACGGTGATCCTGCAGACCGACGTGACCGACCTGATCCGCATC1620              GAGCGGCTCGAGCGCGGCAAGATGCTCGACGATCAGGCCCGCCGTTATCCGCGCGTACGC1680              AGCTCGCATCACATCAATCAGGGGGTCTGCATCTTCGATGCCGAGGGGCGGCTCGTCGGC1740              TGGAACCAGCGCCTCGGCTCGCTGCTCGCGATCCCGATGAACCGCTTCCGGCTGGGGGTG1800              AGCTTCGGCTACCTGCTCGAACGGTTCGCGCACGAGATCAGCTTCGGCGAGGGCATGGAT1860              GCGGCCCATCTCGAGGCCTGGGTCCAGGCCGCGCCACGAACGCGCGCGCGCTCTCTTTCG1920              AGCCTCCGCCGCCACGACGAGCTGATCCTCGATGTCTTCGCCGCAGGAAGATGCCCCACC1980              GCGGCTTCGTGATGAGTTTCACCGACGTCACGCCGAGCGGGCCCCCGCCATCGATGCGCT2040              GAGCCGTGCGAACGAAAACGTTCGAGGCGCGGGTGATGGAGCGGACGCTGGAGCTCGAGG2100              ATGCGCTCCCTTGGGTCATGCCGACGGGCCAATGGGTCGCGCTCGCGC2148                          GlySerCysArgArgAlaAsnGlySerArgSerArg                                          1510                                                                          TTCGTGGCGGCGGCGAGCCACGATCTGTTGCAGCCGCTGTCGGCGGCC2196                          PheValAlaAlaAlaSerHisAspLeuLeuGlnProLeuSerAlaAla                              152025                                                                        AAGCTCTTCATCGCCACCATCGGCGACGAGGCGGTGGCGCCCGAAAGC2244                          LysLeuPheIleAlaThrIleGlyAspGluAlaValAlaProGluSer                              303540                                                                        CGCGAGGCGCTGACCAAGGCGCAGAAGGCGCTCGACTCGGTGGAGGGG2292                          ArgGluAlaLeuThrLysAlaGlnLysAlaLeuAspSerValGluGly                              45505560                                                                      ATCCTCGGCGCGCTTCTCGACATCTCGAAACTCGAGTCGGGCCGGGCG2340                          IleLeuGlyAlaLeuLeuAspIleSerLysLeuGluSerGlyArgAla                              657075                                                                        GCGGTCTCGATCCAGCCGGTGCGCCTCGACCGGCTGATGGCGGAGCTC2388                          AlaValSerIleGlnProValArgLeuAspArgLeuMetAlaGluLeu                              808590                                                                        TCCGACGAATTCGCGCCCATCGCCGCGGCGGCGCGCGGCCTCCGGCTCACGG2440                      SerAspGluPhe                                                                  95                                                                            TGCAGCCCTCGAGCGCGGTGGTGGCCTCCGACCCGACCTATCTCCGGCGGATCCTCCAGA2500              ACCTGATCGGCAATGCGATCCGCTACACCGCGAAGGCAGGTGCTTCTCGCGCGCGGATGA2560              ACC2563                                                                       (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:6:                                              (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:                                                 (A) LENGTH: 96 amino acids                                                    (B) TYPE: amino acid                                                          (D) TOPOLOGY: linear                                                          (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: protein                                                   (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:6:                                       GlySerCysArgArgAlaAsnGlySerArgSerArgPheValAlaAla                              151015                                                                        AlaSerHisAspLeuLeuGlnProLeuSerAlaAlaLysLeuPheIle                              202530                                                                        AlaThrIleGlyAspGluAlaValAlaProGluSerArgGluAlaLeu                              354045                                                                        ThrLysAlaGlnLysAlaLeuAspSerValGluGlyIleLeuGlyAla                              505560                                                                        LeuLeuAspIleSerLysLeuGluSerGlyArgAlaAlaValSerIle                              65707580                                                                      GlnProValArgLeuAspArgLeuMetAlaGluLeuSerAspGluPhe                              859095                                                                        (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:7:                                              (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:                                                 (A) LENGTH: 20 base pairs                                                     (B) TYPE: nucleic acid                                                        (C) STRANDEDNESS: single                                                      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear                                                          (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid                                        (A) DESCRIPTION: /desc = "oligonucleotide                                     complementary to region downstream of adhI translation                        start codon"                                                                  (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:7:                                       ATTGACCTCCATGATCTCGA20                                                        __________________________________________________________________________

We claim:
 1. A genetic construct comprising:a protein-encoding indicatorgene; and a transcriptional adhI promoter from Rhodobacter sphaeroidesoperably linked to the indicator gene; and a cis-acting operator from R.sphaeroides operably linked to the promoter, the promoter and operatortogether specifically directing transcription of the indicator gene in aRhodobacter sphaeroides cell comprising a protein that sensesformaldehyde and a trans-acting protein that modulates transcriptionfrom the promoter in response to a signal from the protein that sensesformaldehyde.
 2. The genetic construct as claimed in claim 1 wherein thetranscriptional promoter and operator are located within the sequencebetween nucleotides 1 and 310 of SEQ ID NO:1.
 3. The genetic constructas claimed in claim 1 wherein the transcriptional promoter and operatorare located within the sequence between nucleotides 220 and 310 of SEQID NO:1.
 4. The genetic construct as claimed in claim 1 wherein thetranscriptional promoter and operator are located within the sequencebetween nucleotides 241 and 310 of SEQ ID NO:1.
 5. The genetic constructas claimed in claim 1 wherein the indicator gene encodes a detectableprotein.
 6. The genetic construct as claimed in claim 1 wherein theindicator gene encodes a protein that acts upon a detectable substrate.7. The genetic construct as claimed in claim 1 wherein the indicatorgene is a GSH-FDH gene.
 8. The genetic construct as claimed in claim 7wherein the indicator gene is Rhodobacter sphaeroides adhI.
 9. ARhodobacter sphaeroides cell comprising:a non-native genetic constructcomprising a protein-encoding indicator gene, a transcriptional adhIpromoter from R. sphaeroides operably linked to the indicator gene, anda cis-acting adhI operator from R. sphaeroides operably linked to thepromoter; a protein that senses formaldehyde; and a trans-actingregulatory protein that modulates transcription of the indicator genefrom the transcriptional promoter in response to a signal from theprotein that senses formaldehyde, wherein the promoter and operatortogether specifically direct transcription of the indicator gene whenthe cell is exposed to formaldehyde.
 10. The cell as claimed in claim 9wherein the transcriptional promoter and operator are located within thesequence between nucleotides 1 and 310 of SEQ ID NO:1.
 11. The cell asclaimed in claim 9 wherein the transcriptional promoter and operator arelocated within the sequence between nucleotides 220 and 310 of SEQ IDNO:1.
 12. The cell as claimed in claim 9 wherein the transcriptionalpromoter and operator are located within the sequence betweennucleotides 241 and 310 of SEQ ID NO:1.
 13. The cell as claimed in claim9 wherein the indicator gene encodes a detectable protein.
 14. The cellas claimed in claim 9 wherein the indicator gene encodes a protein thatacts upon a detectable substrate.
 15. The cell as claimed in claim 9wherein the indicator gene is a GSH-FDH gene.
 16. The cell as claimed inclaim 9 further comprising a genetic construct encoding the sensingprotein.
 17. The cell as claimed in claim 9 further comprising a geneticconstruct encoding the trans-acting regulatory protein.
 18. The cell asclaimed in claim 15 wherein the indicator gene is Rhodobactersphaeroides adhI.
 19. The cell as claimed in claim 16 wherein thegenetic construct encoding the sensing protein comprises a sequence ofSEQ ID NO:5 from bases 1 to
 2000. 20. The cell as claimed in claim 17wherein the genetic construct encoding the trans-acting regulatoryprotein comprises a sequence of SEQ ID NO:3 from bases 220 to
 892. 21. Agenetic construct encoding a Rhodobacter sphaeroides trans-actingregulatory protein that modulates transcription of an indicator genefrom a transcriptional promoter in response to a signal from a R.sphaeroides protein that senses formaldehyde, the DNA comprising asequence of SEQ ID NO:3 from bases 220 to
 892. 22. A genetic constructencoding a Rhodobacter sphaeroides protein that senses formaldehyde, theDNA comprising a sequence of SEQ ID NO:5 from bases 1 to
 2000. 23. Agenetic construct comprising:a transcriptional promoter active in aRhodobacter sphaeroides host cell; and a gene encoding a protein thatsenses formaldehyde in a sample and directs a signal to a repressorprotein in response thereto, the gene comprising a sequence of SEQ IDNO:5 from bases 1 to
 2000. 24. A genetic construct comprising:atranscriptional promoter active in a Rhodobacter sphaeroides host cell;and a gene encoding a trans-acting transcriptional repressor proteinthat de-represses transcription in response to a signal from a proteinthat senses the presence of formaldehyde, the gene comprising a sequenceof SEQ ID NO:3 from bases 220 to 892.